Would you say that there a way to judge "good" reasoning and "bad" reasoning that is distinct from just determining wether the statement is logically valid? — Echarmion
Definitely people do that all the time, because people judge good and bad reasoning very frequently where they're not even familiar with a concept of logical validity. — Terrapin Station
For example, you might have temptation to eat a piece of cake. You like the taste, you'd love eating it, but you don't like the calories (maybe you're trying to lose weight), the health issues (maybe you're worried about or you have diabetes), etc. — Terrapin Station
So, what is it they, or we, compare statements, or an argument against when we make that judgement? — Echarmion
That is a pretty light form of temptation, I'd say. Plus it's quite rational. — Moliere
If there are people in the world who you don't care about, then your moral views are not going to be about them. — Terrapin Station
that would only be a credo that you feel. It's nothing like an objective fact. — Terrapin Station
Do you mean that ideas about moral should not include methods that are general to everyone? — Christoffer
but assessing the well-being for all, including the self. — Christoffer
No. What I mean is that if your ideas about morality include methods that are general to everyone, then it's not true that there are people in the world who you don't care about (in that respect). — Terrapin Station
You're ignoring that "this fact rather than that is 'well-being'" IS a way that you feel. It's a preference you have. Objectively, there are no preferences for any facts (or counterfactuals) versus any other facts (or counterfactuals) — Terrapin Station
If I lacked all empathy I could still deduce that food is good for a person in order for him to survive. — Christoffer
Are you saying that giving food to someone who is hungry so that he survives isn't a choice for the well-being of that person? — Christoffer
Then a hug, which has been scientifically confirmed to raise dopamine levels in the brain, is a choice I can make for increasing the well-being of that person without even have any emotional value linked to that choice. — Christoffer
They could use these guidelines to act like good people, even though they don't have any feelings or emotional reasons to do so. — Christoffer
You can deduce that food is necessary to survive. You can't deduce that survival is good or better than not surviving, because that's not a fact. That's a preference that people can have. — Terrapin Station
"Survival is well-being" isn't a fact. It's a preference. It's a way that people feel, where they would rather than one set of facts obtains (survival) than another set (a lack of survival). — Terrapin Station
The emotional value is that you prefer raising their dopamine levels to the alternative. — Terrapin Station
Why would they do that over the alternative(s)? — Terrapin Station
You miss that the deduction was about well-being. Are you saying "not surviving" is well-being? — Christoffer
What is your definition of well-being for a person? — Christoffer
Why are you ignoring the point I'm making? I provided a moral method to use in order to be morally good. The method is detached from feelings and emotions. — Christoffer
If a person that has zero empathy is told to follow this moral guideline in order to function according to good morals in society, he can do it without having empathy. — Christoffer
Then, because of this, the choice of raising dopamine levels has nothing to do with emotions, — Christoffer
Invent a reason, like, they need to stay on our planet but will be killed if they start a war with us. So they have to live with us and function in society like if they were people. But since they have no emotion or feelings like us, they need a method to assess good moral values. — Christoffer
Pain, however, is more uniform in nature - even a masochist feels pain. So, I suggest you use pain rather than dislike in the matter of morality. The connection between morality and dislike is too weak. Pain is a better partner. — TheMadFool
People compare it to how they reason, what makes sense to them. — Terrapin Station
I'm saying that nothing, objectively is well-being. If you want to focus on the brain chemistry factors re a feeling of well-being, that's fine, but (a) that still isn't objective (because we're talking about a mental state, which makes it subjective by definition), and (b) there's no objective fact that creating the brain states in question are preferential to not creating them. — Terrapin Station
You're ignoring the point I'm making. — Terrapin Station
A hypothetical person who has "zero empathy" can follow someone else's guidelines, sure. And those guidelines will count as "good morals" to people who agree with those preferences. They'll count as "bad morals" to people who disagree with those preferences. — Terrapin Station
If they have no emotions or feelings whatsoever, the they have no reason to choose not starting a war and being killed or anything else. They have to have preferences to make those sorts of choices. — Terrapin Station
The significance of pain (for morality, at least) is that people don't like it — Terrapin Station
I've said an objective method to assess good morals — Christoffer
An objective method to assess whose "good morals"? — Terrapin Station
. I said that it doesn't make sense to not dislike x but to feel that x is immoral where we're not equivocating. — Terrapin Station
Is "not disliking" different from "Liking"? — Moliere
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